[Grammar] on/at/by my own choice.

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Aamir Tariq

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Urdu
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Pakistan
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Suppose, I used to work at a school as a teacher but I decided to quit my job for some reason. Now a colleague of mine from the same school is asking me to rejoin the school. And I am saying no.


  1. I left the school at my own choice.
  2. I left the school on my own choice.
  3. I left the school by my own choice.

Now tell me which one is grammatical and which one is more natural.

Regards
Aamir the Global Citizen
 
Number three is the only grammatical and natural choice.
 
I find 3 unnecessarily wordy.

I left school by choice.
I chose to leave school.
I left school. It was my choice.
 
All right, If I rephrase my question a little bit by replacing "my choice" by "my own free will" then which preposition will be appropriate?


  1. I left the school at my own free will.
  2. I left the school on my own free will.
  3. I left the school by my own free will.
Will it still be the third?
 
Yes. 1 and 2 don't work.
 
I think of my own free will​ would be most common. Perhaps that's in AmE though.
 
As happens sometimes on this forum, I read what I expected to read. I could have sworn that 3 said "of". :oops:
 
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